Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Telegraphy in which messages are transmitted by radio instead of wire.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Telegraphy by means of electric waves; wireless telegraphy.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Telegraphy using the radiant energy of radio waves; wireless telegraphy; -- the term adopted for use by the Radiotelegraphic Convention of 1912.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The process and techniques of sending
telegrams using radio waves rather than wires.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun the use of radio to send telegraphic messages (usually by Morse code)
- noun telegraphy that uses transmission by radio rather than by wire
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Transmissions to and from the entire Japanese fleet were in radiotelegraphy, not voice.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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Paul Dane of the Society of Wireless Pioneers provided invaluable insights into the International Morse Code and its difference from Japanese radiotelegraphy.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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Transmissions to and from the entire Japanese fleet were in radiotelegraphy, not voice.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
The machine had been secretly developed by the Underwood Typewriter Company33 to convert the unique dot-dash radiotelegraphy code of the Imperial Japanese Navy to Latin-alphabet equivalents.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
The machine had been secretly developed by the Underwood Typewriter Company33 to convert the unique dot-dash radiotelegraphy code of the Imperial Japanese Navy to Latin-alphabet equivalents.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
Paul Dane of the Society of Wireless Pioneers provided invaluable insights into the International Morse Code and its difference from Japanese radiotelegraphy.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
Transmissions to and from the entire Japanese fleet were in radiotelegraphy, not voice.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
Paul Dane of the Society of Wireless Pioneers provided invaluable insights into the International Morse Code and its difference from Japanese radiotelegraphy.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
The machine had been secretly developed by the Underwood Typewriter Company33 to convert the unique dot-dash radiotelegraphy code of the Imperial Japanese Navy to Latin-alphabet equivalents.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
-
Paul Dane of the Society of Wireless Pioneers provided invaluable insights into the International Morse Code and its difference from Japanese radiotelegraphy.
DAY OF DECEIT ROBERT B. STINNETT 2001
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